Los Angeles Times

Danza, Groban buddy up on TV

Tony Danza and Josh Groban charm as a father-son detective duo in Netflix series.

- LORRAINE ALI TELEVISION CRITIC lorraine.ali@latimes.com Twitter: @lorraineal­i

The pair play a father-son detective duo in Netf lix’s “The Good Cop,” a solid, traditiona­l sitcom.

The waning power of broadcast network TV was one of the big takeaways from Monday’s Primetime Emmys. The televised ceremony saw streaming services rival premium cable in top awards, while NBC and ABC were given just one award each.

The influence of shows that once topped ratings on those grandfathe­r networks, however, is on the rise. Original series that follow throwback sitcom formulas are popping up more frequently on Netflix, fighting for recognitio­n among the edgy, experiment­al or downright amateurish hodgepodge of shows that proliferat­e by the hour.

Perhaps it’s a stab at mass appeal among a sea of niche shows or a trial effort to capture wider audiences with less programmin­g, but the streaming service is turning out more retrominde­d series such as family sitcoms “One Day at a Time” and “All About the Washington­s.” And Friday marks the arrival of the father-son detective series “The Good Cop,” which features heritage sitcom star Tony Danza.

The detective dramedy from “Monk” creator Andy Breckman is an entertaini­ng mix of “Odd Couple” satire and the whodunit mystery of all those detective series from your childhood where the lead character’s quirks were integral to his sleuthing power (“Columbo,” “Monk,” etc). It’s neither risky or genre bending, and that’s sort of the point.

“The Good Cop” offers something for everyone, especially those who don’t have the time or patience for the complexiti­es, gore and slow rollout of streaming series such as “Mindhunter.” Danza and co-star Josh Groban are all about the charm offensive, and it works most of the time as they solve cases episode by episode.

They play two generation­s of New York cops living under the same roof, and of course the men couldn’t be more different. Father Tony Caruso Sr., a.k.a. Big Tony ( Danza), is an ex-NYPD detective just out of prison after serving seven years on corruption charges. His loose interpreta­tion of the law has rubbed off on his son, but not in ways that Big Tony expected.

Tony Caruso Jr., a.k.a. TJ (Groban) is a pathologic­ally strait-laced, by-the-book detective. He keeps a swear jar in the precinct and won’t even use the sugar packets his dad lifted from IHOP in his morning coffee at home.

Their clashing personalit­ies fuel some of the best scenes, such as when TJ won’t run a red light, even when the traffic signal is busted and there’s a line of honking, aggravated motorists bottleneck­ed behind him. His exasperate­d father wonders where he went wrong with the kid.

But Big Tony is softhearte­d and would do anything to protect his son. And both are crack detectives, so together they solve the toughest of cases, even if Dad’s help is as a consultant.

TJ’s fastidious adherence to the rules annoys everyone else on the force as well, including his partner, Burl Loomis (Isiah Whitlock Jr.), a jaded veteran who’s so close to retirement he can practicall­y feel the swing of a hammock as he dozes off in the squad car.

Newby on the force Cara Vasquez (Monica Barbaro) recognizes TJ’s brilliance and sympathize­s with his obsessive need to be honest no matter the cost. It’s a son paying for his father’s sins.

Based on an Israeli show of the same name, “The Good Cop” tackles and solves new cases over its hour-long episodes while also dealing with bigger mysteries such as the disappeara­nce of Big Tony’s wife and TJ’s mom and the real circumstan­ces behind Dad’s fall from grace.

The show represents vocalist extraordin­aire Groban’s first lead role in a series, and in many ways, he appears more comfortabl­e than Danza delivering subtle and then not-so-subtle jokes about his character’s quirks and Big Tony’s fraught relationsh­ip with the truth.

“The Good Cop” is a solid, traditiona­l detective sitcom for viewers seeking the solace of a simpler time, before cable and disruptive streaming services altered the landscape with weird shows like “Stranger Things.” And ironically, it’s brought to you by Netflix.

 ?? Michele K. Short Netf lix ?? JOSH GROBAN, left, plays a strait-laced detective opposite his dad, a former New York detective just out of prison, played by Tony Danza.
Michele K. Short Netf lix JOSH GROBAN, left, plays a strait-laced detective opposite his dad, a former New York detective just out of prison, played by Tony Danza.

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